2014: The Collapsing Obamaconomy

The good news is the U.S. economy wheezed out 204,000 new jobs in October, despite all the sound and fury (signifying very little) over the 17%, 16-day-long government semi-demi-shutdown. The bad news is pretty much everything else, so let's take a look at what lies underneath the big headline number.

CNBC put a happy face on the latest jobs report with the headline, "Shutdown slowdown? Job creation soars in October." It's true that 204,000 is a bit higher than the recent average of 190,000, but the story's very first paragraph belies the word "soars." Read:

There were a net 204,000 new jobs created for the month, though the unemployment rate rose to 7.3 percent and households reported a huge drop in employment, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said. A separate measure that includes the underemployed and those who have quit looking also moved higher, from 13.6 percent to 13.8 percent.

The story goes on to quote Moody's Mark Zandi who called the jobs report "bizarre," and said that he "wouldn't be surprised if this gets revised to some degree...down." So much for the downward revision to come "unexpectedly," which is the word Reuters uses to describe the recent drop in U.S. consumer confidence:

The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan's preliminary reading on the overall index of consumer sentiment fell to 72.0 in November, its lowest since December 2011. That was lower than both October's final reading of 73.2 and the 74.5 economists had expected this month.

Lower-income households in particular worried about their future financial state.

Lower-income households are right to be worried, in particular and in general -- because their prospects aren't looking so good. Consumer spending slowed last month on a "deceptively weak" GDP report. A big chunk of last quarter's GDP growth was business inventories increasing on weak demand, and weak imports -- another sign of weakening demand -- also made growth appear bigger than it actually was.

"It's a weird report" says Zachary Karabell, the head of global strategy at Envestnet and founder of River Twice Research in the attached video. "It's people tending bar. It's lower wage retail jobs. It's lower wage health services jobs" that the economy is creating, and "a lot of these are not particularly well paid and they don't have a great future."

And that's a problem. Not only for the 14-million American who are still out of work and looking to get hired, but more broadly, it undercuts the entire economy.

"If you're earning $18,000 a year as a bartender, that's not going to translate into massive consumer spending," Karabell says.

How does that bartender compare with a bartender from last year? He's not really doing any better at all. BLS reports that wages were 1.7% higher than last year, but that prices rose 1.6% during that same timeframe. That raise of one-tenth of one percent isn't likely to result in a robust Christmas shopping season.